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The telecommunications industry is enabling crucial connections amid COVID-19 uncertainty


2020年4月10日

Telecom operators have long been a fabric of our society. Their networks and services underpin the way in which we communicate, learn, shop, and entertain ourselves. They enable essential government services and provide the highway for the digital economy. Never have they been more relevant than today, connecting families and communities while keeping businesses and educational institutions “logged on.”

During this unprecedented time, communication service providers (CSPs) have shown a resilience and willingness to act, giving us a glimpse into the new market reality. In this “new normal,” CSPs are leading efforts for remote working, online learning, and social distancing.

 

Immediate response: Answering the call

Around the world, CSPs have responded with a sense of urgency, purpose, and empathy. IBM is supporting its CSP clients in their efforts across several fronts:

  • Supporting healthcare and government agencies by equipping field hospitals in the UK with high speed connectivity and devices, providing insight on population movement to tackle the spread of the virus in the US, Asia and EU, connecting citizens to vital information, and enabling national health institutions with the tools to work remotely and securely as they research a cure for COVID-19
  • Extending network capacity by 30 to 50 percent to support secure remote working for businesses, and connecting teachers and students via virtual classrooms
  • Implementing remote and virtual agent strategies to deliver customer care amid escalating traffic to contact centers and digital channels
  • Ensuring continued service to residential and small business customers unable to pay their current bills, waiving late fees, and opening Wi-Fi hotspots to anyone who needs them.

Short- to mid-term: Reacting to market conditions

As our societies and economies are connected and powered by communication networks, the telecom industry has been less impacted in the financial markets than many others. However, over the next few months, the industry will need to respond to several common challenges, including:

  • Significant pressure on operating expenses, with rapid cost take-out initiatives
  • Prioritization of critical capital expenditure aligned to revenue and business continuity
  • Supply chain optimization in the face of equipment and labor supply volatility
  • Revenue and cash management amid an economic downturn, extended payments.

Longer term: Implications for the new normal

As a new normal emerges, there are a few fundamental reactions that we can expect from the telecom industry:

  1. CSPs will likely accelerate their digital transformations, institutionalizing new ways of working for their employees. Consumers and businesses will demand a richer, more consistent omnichannel digital experience with an emphasis on digital self-service. We will see more use of artificial intelligence (AI) to augment call center agents and retail stores, providing for greater customer insight and real-time decisions.
     
  2. Facing continued pressure on operating expenses and business agility, we expect to see a renewed sense of urgency in shifting to hybrid cloud IT and network architectures and operations with extreme automation. This will propel deployment of open, seamless network architectures that deliver new levels or orchestration and agility. Changes to accommodate major shifts in workload, load balancing, and more infusion of AI/machine learning (ML) into the network at the Core, Edge or vRAN, will become key to investment strategies and sustained operational efficiency.
     
  3. We can expect to see more examples of traditional telcos reinventing themselves as  platform businesses, operating as both a digital services provider and digital services enabler. We are already seeing the impact of COVID-19 on planned 5G deployments—with China and the US continuing, if not accelerating, the pace while several other countries have postponed spectrum auctions and rollouts.

    As businesses and governments establish their own versions of a new normal, 5G and Edge computing will be necessary to deliver the automation, performance and cognitive insight required by many of these industries including manufacturing, energy and utilities, and healthcare, among others. Telecom operators will need to embrace open ecosystems to externalize innovation and accelerate new services.
     
  4. Cybersecurity will be high on the agenda, as post COVID-19 brings an increased level of digital access to businesses and information around the globe. CSPs will experience an increase in remote working for their own employees, in addition to an expansion of security-as-a-service offerings to support their business customers.

Moving forward, whatever this new normal holds for the industry, we can expect change to impact all aspects of the telecom business. These changes range from the manner in which providers serve customers and engage with partners, to the work environment they create for employees, to actions they execute to prioritize investments and streamline operations, as well as steps to extend the linkages they are creating with local communities.

To support our clients, IBM has gathered together a set of best practices and recommendations focused around four priority areas: employees, customers and partners, finance and operations, and community. Click here to access our COVID-19 Action Guide and related resources.


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Meet the author

Craig Wilson

Craig Wilson
Vice President Global Telecom, Media & Entertainment Industry, IBM


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